Historically, many critical trade marketing functions get divided amongst the trade team members to individually manage as the “expert.” That “expert” crafts a process and usually picks some tool (platform) to do the job. The department is then handcuffed to its single expert – relying on that person to always get the job done. This arrangement leads to some obvious issues.
Have you ever asked one of your team members for help finding information, only to receive an uninformed or ‘hot potato’ answer (or perhaps, a complete lack of answers).
I’m also willing to bet that your current single-solution platforms don’t work seamlessly together and do not speak with your sales ERP. This is a common breaking point for trade marketing teams, creating failures that the entire brand will see and feel. Your platform should be thoroughly integrated with your vendors and dealers databases, and weave internal departments together, with your brand at the core of the business.
As your brand launches product after product, this naturally becomes the priority for your trade marketing department, often leaving the marketing process and operational automation development in second place. With competing priorities, most trade marketing departments simply lack the capacity to move beyond tactics to strategy, execution and finally to measurement. The trade marketing team is saddled with the most labour intensive, logistically heavy, ultra-diverse task lists in marketing, with the least amount of time to execute their task. But without them, all the previous work done by the teams prior is null and void.
Love or hate him, Jordan Peterson makes a valid point when he says, “organisation is the pre-condition to freedom”. This can be applied to all business operations, meaning that if you want your department to do its job effectively, you need discipline and order to do so. Why? When the team isn’t weighed down with administrative nonsense and wild goose chases, they have the time and freedom to excel at what they’re best at.
- Who is assembling the fixture?
- Who is going to ensure that it is merchandized?
- What happens to the old fixture (does it go to another dealer or get destroyed)?
- How are you allocating the fixtures to market?
- What budget are we using?
- Are they CAPEX or OPEX?
- Are they allocated or open inventory?
- How do we report condition?
- How do we repair it if it gets damaged?
Or, could it be that they are frustrated because your team loses data, looks unorganized, and is late on projects? Perhaps all the above are true. I like to believe they are simply wary of needless work and change, and the barrier we are all facing is one of historically bad process, not poor behaviour or bad intentions. We all know the siloed department structure can create animosity between sales and marketing.
Advanced tools are needed to keep modern brick-and-mortar sales on pace with the ever-changing digital sales landscape. When B&M lags behind digital, it can quickly make retailers look out of date. This confuses the consumer and drives them towards an online purchase. Your reps need to be able to move lightning-fast to keep their B&M dealers on point and provide the retailer with tools that pull the consumer back into the store.
CRM systems specialize in organizing marketing generation leads, and do not have the specific trade marketing operations tools your team needs, like Fixture / Display Order & Management, Marketplace Custom Art Order & Management, Promo Order & Management, Content Delivery, and Budget Management. CRMs are obviously not designed to take the day-to-day work off your trade marketing team.
ERP systems are built for sales and production operations and include sales operations, production management, shipping and logistical tools, all tied into accounting. They also do not provide the tools your trade marketing team needs.
Now, of course, the large ERP and CRM players can build custom systems for you. This is how they make money. And it is a HUGE amount of money. I have often come across custom modules that get abandoned because they no longer work with the current brand structure and are just too expensive and time consuming to fix. So, 9 out of 10 times, we see the trade marketing work fall back into spreadsheets.
This integrated, well-designed platform should provide connected workflows and data. It needs to be flexible enough to bend to your process but also bring solutions with the fewest possible bottlenecks. It should involve all the departments that need to participate and have skin in the game, including your vendors. It should be agile and mobile. Your trade marketing structure should streamline all pipelines, deliver your sales tools to market with laser precision, and it should play nicely with your ERP and CRM.
You’re right – there will be pain points initially. Your team may not be comfortable during the switch, it will cost both time and money to change some of your process, and horror of horrors; you will have to speak to the IT department. BUT… Soon, your team will be way faster and much happier when provided with the optics and tools they actually need. You’ll finally get the clean data you need to tell you what’s going on in your department, and you’ll be able to save money to invest into future activations, which will INCREASE SALES.